PARCC: Assessments, Dates, and Implications

The PARCC End-of-Course and Performance Based assessments will be given for grades 9-11 in ELA. Here is a summary of assessments, dates, and implications for teachers and students.

As a quick overview, ninth through eleventh grade will be taking the PARCC End-of-Course Exams and Performance-Based Assessments. In addition, the tenth graders will also be taking the OGT; this is the last group of students who will do so. Here are the tests required for ELA in 2014-2015.

PARCC End-of-Course Exams, 2014-2015:

Administration Window of April 13 to May 15

English I, Grade 9

English II, Grade 10

English III, Grade 11

PARCC Performance-Based Assessments, 2015-2015:

Administration Window of February 16 to March 20

Grade 9

Grade 10

Grade 11

OGT, 2014-2015:

Administration Window of March 16 to 29

Grade 10

Current tenth graders will be the last class required to take and pass the OGT for graduation. The new graduation requirements (beginning with this year’s freshmen) will require students to have taken the seven mandated End-of-Course exams, and also have received a passing score on each or have passed one of two college and career readiness requirements. This “New HIgh School Graduation Requirements” sheet from ODE is a helpful resource in understanding the new mandates. This additional resource from ODE summarizes the process further and provides additional information.

Since the field test, revisions have been made to the End-of-Course English exams which will shorten the time to take the test. This post from PARCC explains the changes explicitly, but in summary, there is one less reading passage and four fewer questions. This is what will appear on the revised 2014-2015 test according to PARCC’s website:

Revised End-of-Course Test Outline:

1 short literary passage with 5 questions

1 “paired” passage set with 6 questions

(paired passage set comprised of two short literary passages, two short informational passages, or a literary and an informational passage)

Value added is a data measure “designed to show how much academic progress a student makes over a school year, [it] compares test scores from one year to scores at the end of the next year.”

According to The Plain Dealer, value added data will likely be available from the PARCC’s End-of-Course assessment for English and math in 2014-2015. Value Added data has been available in other grade levels before, but this is the first time 9-12 grade teachers and administrators will have access to this information.

However, for the first year of implementing PARCC, teachers will be operating under “safe harbor,” which basically means, “…scores from the state’s first year of Common Core testing in 2014-15 can’t be held against them.”